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Prominent Economist James K. Galbraith Accepts Bentsen Chair at LBJ School of Public Affairs

Economist James K. Galbraith has been appointed to the Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations at The University of Texas at Austin's Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. The appointment will go into effect September 1. Galbraith, currently a professor of public affairs at the LBJ School, is known nationally and internationally for his work in macroeconomic policy and global inequality.

"Jamie is an all-star ­ great scholar, famous, brings attention to the LBJ School," said Stephen Magee, a professor at the Red McCombs School of Business who served on the ad hoc selection committee. "He is good at picking hot topics, doing high quality research and getting the work into circulation."

Galbraith graduated magna cum laude from Harvard in 1974 and was a Marshall Scholar at Cambridge University the following year. He received a Ph.D. in economics from Yale in 1981. He served in several positions on the staff of the U.S. Congress, including executive director of the Joint Economic Committee in the early 1980s. He joined the LBJ School faculty in 1985.

In the mid-1990s, Galbraith served for three years as chief technical adviser to the State Planning Commission of China on a United Nations Development Program project on macroeconomic reform ­ in effect becoming a senior adviser to the Chinese government. He is presently national board chair of Economists Allied for Arms Reduction, an organization concerned with conflict reduction, security and development issues; six Nobel laureates in Economics, and one in Peace, presently sit on ECAAR's board. Galbraith is also Senior Scholar with the Jerome Levy Economics Institute in New York.

Galbraith has authored two books, Balancing Acts: Technology, Finance and the American Future and Created Unequal: The Crisis in American Pay. He coedited a book ­ Inequality and Industrial Change: A Global View ­ that features contributions coauthored with six LBJ School Ph.D. students. He has coauthored two textbooks, The Economic Problem and Macroeconomics and has published nearly 70 academic articles and chapters in academic books. A former coordinator of the LBJ School's Ph.D. Program in Public Policy, he is currently director of The University of Texas Inequality Project.

A prolific public commentator, Galbraith has published many op-ed pieces in the New York Times as well as in Newsday, the Boston Globe, the Austin American-Statesman, and other newspapers. He writes regularly for the Texas Observer and occasionally for The American Prospect, The Nation, and Dissent. He reviews books for The Washington Monthly and other publications. He was for a time a columnist on the TheStreet.com, and continues to make occasional commentaries for Public Radio International¹s Marketplace.

Around the time Galbraith began his career on the staff the U.S. Congress, Senator Lloyd Bentsen of Texas indicated his intent to fund a professorship at the LBJ School. The UT System Board of Regents approved the Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. Professorship in Public Affairs in 1973. In 1980, the Board of Regents elevated the endowment to the Lloyd Bentsen Chair in Business/Government Relations. Among the major donors were Senator Bentsen, the Houston Endowment, the M.D. Anderson Foundation, the Moody Foundation, Scurlock Oil and the LBJ Family Foundation.

When the chair was established, Sen. Bentsen expressed the hope that it would attract people with "professional experience." He was not interested in using the chair to hire academics whose audience consisted primarily of other scholars.

"Professor Galbraith is a public intellectual in the tradition of his father, John Kenneth, and of our own Ray Marshall," said LBJ School Dean Edwin Dorn. "His ability to operate in the policymaking arena and to communicate with the general public make him an altogether fitting occupant for the chair."

Past holders of the chair include former Federal Reserve Chairman G. William Miller (1984-85), Congressman Robert C. Krueger (1985-86), Ambassador Robert Strauss (1987-91), and Mary Beth Rogers (1992-93), who served as Governor Ann Richards' Chief of Staff.

May 1, 2002


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May 1 , 2002

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